Bobbers still exciting after all these years

Published 11:10 pm Sunday, June 7, 2015

By Chester Moore Jr.
There is something special about watching a bobber start moving and then disappear below the surface.
If fact, I daresay if you can’t get excited about seeing that you should consider taking up badminton or underwater basket weaving.
Your enthusiasm for angling is obviously gone.
When I was a kid, virtually every bobber at the tackle shop was the classic red and white ones with the blue stem. If you put a little weight below it, the red would barely show as it floated in the water with a hunk of nightcrawler below it.
I have been into the technical side of fishing for a number of years and enjoy the intricacies of figuring which lure of the right lure is best to fish on the exact kind of line, rod and reel.
But I also like to set in a lawn chair on the bank and watch a bobber move along in the current until something pulls it under.
As a child, it was all about catching the longnose gar at the gully down the street from my house. The bobber would start moving back and forth and usually swimming down the canal before they decided to pull it under.
Later it was catching crappie over brushpiles. No fish (even my beloved flounder) excited me more than a sac-a-lit so it is always with great anticipation to have one of those spotted beauties suck one under.
We have used large popping corks to target blacktips in the Gulf of Mexico out of Sabine Pass. A few pops and then comes a swirl and often a jump.
I have never caught a marlin but after seeing some of our local blacktips and spinners striking a cut mullet under a popping cork, I don’t feel slighted. Their fight is tremendous.
In Venice, La. four years ago I caught the biggest redfish of my life (a 45-inch nearly 50 pound behemoth) while fishing a plastic under a popping cork in 18 inches of water.
That fight lasted just a little bit longer than the little gar back at the gully but it pulled down the bobber just like them. It started moving slowly and then swam away before descending.
The events after the hookset were a whole other affair.
My friend Mark Davis of Bigwater Adventures television fishes all over the world and has had some of his biggest success on a popping cork with a plastic.
I watched him out fish me and a lodge full of guides for big trout near Port Mansfield six years ago. He caught a 30-incher right in front of us on a rig that had those very big trout spoiled guides a little upset.
How could such an elusive fish be caught on a such a simple setup?
The bottom line is bobbers work and although we have come a long way from the red, white and blue one of the past, they still help us catch fish.
And it is still exciting to watch one go under whether pursuing mud cats in a drainage ditch or big trout in Lower Laguna Madre.
(To contact Chester Moore, e-mail him at chester@kingdomzoo.com. You can hear him on “Moore Outdoors” Fridays from 6-7 p.m. on Newstalk AM 560 KLVI or online atwww.klvi.com.)

Subscribe to our free email newsletter

Get the latest news sent to your inbox

About Gabriel Pruett

Gabriel Pruett has worked with both the Port Arthur News and Orange Leader since 2000. A majority of the time has been spent covering all aspects of Southeast Texas high school sports. Pruett's claim to fame is...being able to write his own biographical information for this website.

email author More by Gabriel